Rain stopped - Sun out now
CRICINFO:
10.03 local time Hello! The rain has stopped. Sun is out. Sunshowers: The fox is getting married somewhere. Schizoprehenic weather. The covers are coming off. Musical chairs out there at Mirpur.
Cultures all over the world have responded to rains during sunlight, creating folktales about fox wedding, as well as other animal weddings. According to Wikipedia: ' In South African English, it is referred to as a "monkey's wedding," a loan translation of the Zulu umshado wezinkawu, a wedding for monkeys. In Afrikaans, it is referred to as jakkalstrou, jackals wedding, or also as jakkals trou met wolf se vrou, meaning "when the jackal marries the Wolf's wife."
In Arabic, it seems the term is "the rats are getting married", while Bulgarians prefer to speak of bears doing so. In Hindi, it becomes "the jackal's wedding." One animal, the fox, crops up all over the world, from Japan to Armenia; there's even an English dialect term, "the foxes' wedding," known from the south west of England. In Calabria, it is said that "when it rains with sun, the foxes are getting married." Other betrothed parties include tigers (Korea), witches (Spain), the poor (Greece), and leopards (various African languages). In Polish, the saying is that "when the sun is shining and the rain is raining, the witch is making butter." '